Earth:Tornado outbreak

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Short description: Multiple tornadoes spawned from the same weather system


Dozens of supercells over Northern Arizona that caused a tornado outbreak on October 6, 2010

A tornado outbreak is the occurrence of multiple tornadoes spawned by the same synoptic scale weather system.[1] The number of tornadoes required to qualify as an outbreak typically are at least six to ten, with at least two rotational locations (if squall line) or at least two supercells producing multiple tornadoes.[2][3]

The tornadoes usually occur within the same day or continue into the early morning hours of the succeeding day, and within the same region. Most definitions allow for a break in tornado activity (time elapsed from the end of the last tornado to the beginning of the next tornado) of six hours. If tornado activity indeed resumes after such a lull, many definitions consider the event to be a new outbreak. A series of continuous or nearly continuous tornado outbreak days is a tornado outbreak sequence.[4] In the United States and Canada, tornado outbreaks usually occur from March through June in the Great Plains, the Midwestern United States, and the Southeastern United States in an area colloquially referred to as Tornado Alley. Tornado outbreaks can also occur during other times of the year and in other parts of the world. A secondary less active and annually inconsistent tornado "season" in the U.S. occurs in late autumn.[5]

A timeline showing three day sequences with at least four violent tornadoes and the number of deaths associated with each. (1875–2014)

Very large tornado outbreaks are known as super outbreaks. The largest tornado outbreak on record was the 2011 Super Outbreak, with 362 tornadoes and about $10 billion in direct damages.[6] It surpassed the 1974 Super Outbreak, in which 148 tornadoes were counted. Both occurred within the United States and Canada. The total number of tornadoes is a problematic method of comparing outbreaks from different periods, however, as many more weaker tornadoes, but not stronger tornadoes, are reported in the US in recent decades than in previous ones due to improvements in tornado detection.[7]

See also

  • Lists of tornadoes and tornado outbreaks
  • Outbreak Intensity Score

References

  1. Glickman, Todd S., ed (2000). Glossary of Meteorology (2nd ed.). American Meteorological Society. ISBN 978-1-878220-34-9. http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?p=1&query=tornado+outbreak. 
  2. Grazulis, Thomas P. (1993). Significant Tornadoes 1680-1991: A Chronology and Analysis of Events. St. Johnsbury, VT: The Tornado Project of Environmental Films. ISBN 978-1-879362-03-1. 
  3. Galway, Joseph G. (1977). "Some Climatological Aspects of Tornado Outbreaks". Mon. Weather Rev. 105 (4): 477–84. doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1977)105<0477:SCAOTO>2.0.CO;2. Bibcode1977MWRv..105..477G. 
  4. Schneider, Russell; H. E. Brooks; J. T. Schaefer (2004). "Tornado Outbreak Day Sequences: historic events and climatology (1875-2003)". Hyannis, MA: American Meteorological Society. http://ams.confex.com/ams/11aram22sls/techprogram/paper_81933.htm. 
  5. Schneider, Russell; H. E. Brooks; J. T. Schaefer (2004). "Tornado Outbreak Days: an updated and expanded climatology (1875-2003)". Hyannis, MA: American Meteorological Society. http://ams.confex.com/ams/11aram22sls/techprogram/paper_82031.htm. 
  6. Smith, Adam B.; Matthews, Jessica L. (July 2015). "Quantifying uncertainty and variable sensitivity within the US billion-dollar weather and climate disaster cost estimates" (in en). Natural Hazards 77 (3): 1829–1851. doi:10.1007/s11069-015-1678-x. ISSN 0921-030X. http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11069-015-1678-x. 
  7. Doswell, Charles A. III (2007). "Small Sample Size and Data Quality Issues Illustrated Using Tornado Occurrence Data". Electron. J. Sev. Storms Meteorol. 2 (5): 1–16. http://www.ejssm.org/ojs/index.php/ejssm/issue/view/8. 

Further reading

External links